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Issue Brief:

How Safe Are the Public Schools: What Do Teachers Say?

APRIL 1996

(NCES 96-842) Ordering information

The nations seventh education goal for the year 2000 aims to ensure safe schools for all students. This goal is a crucial one, as safe schools are important for the achievement of all other national and local education goals (National Education Goals Panel 1994).

Recent public opinion surveys have found that for the majority of Americans, violence in the schools is the number one education-related concern (e.g., Phi Delta Kappa/Gallup 1994). In addition, a survey of students in public school grades 3 through 12 and their parents (Metropolitan Life Insurance Company 1993) disclosed disturbing reports and fears related to violent episodes on school campuses. In light of the views of students, their parents, and the public on conditions relating to school safety, what do teachers think about safety-related problems affecting their schools? The Schools and Staffing Survey (SASS), conducted by the (NCES), provides this perspective.

In 198788, 199091, and 199394, SASS presented teachers in public schools throughout the country with a list of school-related problems and asked for ratings of their severity in their schools. This brief examines two safety-related matters, physical conflicts among students and weapons possession, and presents the percentages of public school teachers who considered these matters as moderate or serious in their schools.*

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* Teachers were provided with four response options: Not a problem, Minor, Moderate, or Serious.


From 198788 to 199394, increasing percentages of teachers in public elementary and secondary schools reported physical conflicts among students as moderate or serious problems in their schools.

From 198788 to 199091, the percentage of public secondary school teachers reporting physical conflicts among students as either moderate or serious problems in their schools increased from approximately 26 percent to nearly 30 percent (figure 1). From 199091 to 199394, this percentage increased from about 30 percent to nearly 40 percent. In addition, public elementary school teachers increasingly reported physical conflicts as moderate or serious problems over this same period, with almost 30 percent making these reports in 199394. In each year, secondary school teachers perceived physical conflicts as moderate or serious problems more frequently than did elementary teachers.

The percentages of public secondary school teachers reporting weapons possession as a moderate or serious problem in their schools nearly doubled from 199091 to 199394.

The percentages of public secondary school teachers reporting weapons possession as a moderate or serious problem remained much the same from 198788 to 199091; however, these reports almost doubled from 199091 to 199394from almost 11 percent to about 20 percent (figure 1). In each year, secondary school teachers reported weapons possession as a moderate or serious problem more frequently than did elementary teachers. The percentage of elementary teachers citing this problem also showed an increase for the same years, rising from 2.2 percent in 199091 to 3.4 percent in 199394. In the case of weapons possession, any concern expressed is a serious matter. In 198788, 42.6 percent of secondary and 19.7 percent of elementary teachers reported weapons possession as a minor problem. These percentages for public secondary and elementary teachers, respectively, were 46.5 percent and 22.2 percent for 199091; for 199394, they were 56.6 percent and 30.6 percent.

From 198788 to 199394, teachers in public schools with more than 750 students consistently reported physical conflicts among students and weapons possession as moderate or serious problems more frequently than did teachers in schools with fewer than 150 students.

In the 198788, 199091, and 199394 school years, just about twice the percentage of elementary teachers in large public schools (i.e., schools with more than 750 students) reported these problems as did their counterparts in small schools (i.e., schools with fewer than 150 students) (table 1). A similar pattern over time can be seen at the secondary level. In addition, at both the elementary and secondary levels in 199394, the percentages of teachers who cited weapons possession as a moderate or serious problem in their schools were at least three times higher in large versus small schools.

Discussion

SASS data related to these two school safety issues suggest that in the opinions of teachers, public schools were less safe in 199394 than they were in 198788 or in 199091. At both the elementary and secondary levels, teacher reports of physical conflicts among students and weapons possession were at their highest levels in 199394. Although more frequently reported at the secondary level over time, these problems were cited more often in large versus small schools at both levels. Analyses of these data also raise important questions for research and practice: Which attributes of schools, particularly those with large enrollments, seem related to greater incidence of reported safety-related problems? Are there fewer adults in these large schools who are available to meet with and informally discuss things with students? How can teachers and other school staff take action to develop more positive relationships among themselves, students, and their families? How safe are private schools in the opinions of their teachers? These and other questions await researchers interested in exploring the SASS databases from NCES.


References and Related Publications:

Bobbitt, S.A. and Rohr, C.L. (1993). What Are the Most Serious Problems in Schools? Washington, D.C.: U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics (NCES Report No. 93149).

Choy, S.P., Henke, R.R., Alt, M.N., Medrich, E.A., and Bobbitt, S.A. (1993). Schools and Staffing in the United States: A Statistical Profile, 199091. Washington, D.C.: U.S. Department of Education, (NCES Report No. 93146).

Choy, S.P., Medrich, E.A., Henke, R.R., and Bobbitt, S.A. (1992). Schools and Staffing in the United States: A Statistical Profile, 198788. Washington, D.C.: U.S. Department of Education, (NCES Report No. 92120).

Henke, R.R., Choy, S.P., and Geis, S. (forthcoming). Schools and Staffing in the United States: A Statistical Profile, 199394. Washington, D.C.: U.S. Department of Education, .

Mansfield, W. and Farris, E. (1992). Public School Teacher Survey on Safe, Disciplined, and Drug-Free Schools. Washington, D.C.: U.S. Department of Education, (NCES Report No. 91091).

Metropolitan Life Insurance Company and Louis Harris and Associates, Inc. (1993). The Metropolitan Life Survey of American Teachers, 1993: Violence in Americas Public Schools. New York: Louis Harris and Associates, Inc.

National Education Goals Panel. (1994). Data Volume for The National Education Goals Report, Volume One: National Data. Washington, D.C.: Author.

Phi Delta Kappa/Gallup, G. (September 1994). 26th Annual Phi Delta Kappa Gallup Poll of the Publics Attitudes Toward the Public Schools. New York: George Gallup and Associates, Inc.


Issue Briefs present information on education topics of current interest. All estimates shown are based on samples and are subject to sampling variability. All differences are statistically significant at the .05 level. In the design, conduct, and data processing of NCES surveys, efforts are made to minimize the effects of nonsampling errors, such as item nonresponse, measurement error, data processing error, or other systematic error. For additional details on SASS data collection methods and definitions, see the following U.S. Department of Education publications: 199091 Schools and Staffing Survey: Sample Design and Estimation (NCES Report Nos. 91-127, 93449, and forthcoming) and Quality Profile for SASS: Aspects of the Quality of Data in the Schools and Staffing Surveys (SASS) (NCES Report No. 94340).

This Issue Brief was prepared by Robert Rossi and Shannon Daugherty, American Institutes for Research. To obtain standard errors or definitions of terms for this Issue Brief, or to obtain additional information about the Schools and Staffing Survey, contact Kerry Gruber at (202) 502-7349. To order additional copies of this Issue Brief or other NCES publications, call 18004241616.


Table 1. Percentages of public school teachers reporting physical conflicts among students 
and weapons possession as moderate or serious problems in their schools, by school size and 
level: 198788, 199091, and 199394
_______________________________________________________________________________________________
                                  <150 students                   >750 students
                             Elementary    Secondary         Elementary    Secondary           
198788
Physical conflicts              13.6         18.1               28.9         30.5
Weapons possession               1.3          7.1                5.1         14.0
199091
Physical conflicts              16.1         15.3               32.1         35.2
Weapons possession               1.3          4.7                2.9         14.2
199394
Physical conflicts              19.9         18.8               37.6         47.4
Weapons possession               1.9          8.6                5.7         26.5
_______________________________________________________________________________________________
SOURCE: U.S. Department of Education, , 198788, 
199091, and 199394 Schools and Staffing Surveys (School and Teacher Questionnaires).
1990 K Street, NW
Washington, DC 20006, USA
Phone: (202) 502-7300 (map)